Iran sentences Bahari to 13 years in prison, 74 lashes

New York, May 10, 2010—The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns a 13-year prison sentence handed down to Iranian-Canadian journalist Maziar Bahari in absentia on Sunday.

Newsweek correspondent Bahari, who was held in detention for four months on manufactured anti-state charges in 2009, was sentenced by a Tehran Revolutionary Court on Sunday to 13 years in prison, in addition to 74 lashes.

Bahari received a sentence of five years in prison for “congregation
and mutiny with the intent to commit crimes against national security,” four
years for “collecting and keeping confidential and classified documents,” one
year for “propagation against the regime,” two years for “insulting the [Supreme]
Leader,” six months for “insulting the President,” and one year and 74 lashes for
“disruption of public order.”

Authorities interrogated Bahari for four months, he told
CPJ, and coerced him to “confess” to a host of serious criminal acts on Iranian
television. He was then convicted for an entirely different set of crimes.

“We condemn the conviction of Maziar Bahari,” said CPJ’s
Middle East and North Africa program
coordinator, Mohamed Abdel Dayem. “Bahari’s trial bears absolutely no
resemblance to a legal process. The sentence is arbitrary and punitive and is
unrelated to the initial charges, which were themselves falsified. The
conviction is a reminder to us that the dozens of Iranian journalists who
remain in jail are at the mercy of a cruel and vindictive regime.”

Bahari has been part of an international campaign that includes
CPJ called “Our Society Will Be a Free Society,” advocating for the release of
imprisoned Iranian journalists and writers, and has made numerous statements and
appearances on their behalf.

Today CPJ and the Overseas Press Club of America sent a letter to
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad calling on him to bring an end to a
nearly year-long campaign of harassment and intimidation of critical Iranian
journalists working domestically and abroad. The letter was signed by nearly
200 prominent media figures who attended the Overseas Press Club’s awards
ceremony in New York
on April 22.